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Pina Baush |
Royal Court Theatre |
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Since she took over the direction of
the Wuppertal Tanztheater 25 years ago, Pina Bausch
has used her training and experience as a soloist
in classical ballet to literally invent a new genre,
a combination of theatre, dance, music, and visual
arts in which score and improvisation come together,
very close to the dream of a total theatre that juxtaposes
the individual talents of an extraordinary ensemble
with a precise concept of time and space. The results
are deconstructions of Stravinsky or Bartok, reconstructions
of Shakespeare or Brecht, or productions based on
a theme - an anniversary, a dance, a farewell, a city
- conceived as children's games or parlour games and
orchestrated like review acts in order to rummage
in the everyday life of the dancers, who pretend to
have stopped dancing, subjected to public questioning
and left to the flow of free associations, citing
over and over but without ruling out psychoanalytical
stripteases.
In these group productions, the great teacher Pina
Bausch, who never forgets that she was once the blind
princess in a visionary film by Fellini, forces her
actors to assume a role and a type of ceremonial,
where extremely varied personal experiences and backgrounds
combine with the precise geometry of the rhythmic
movements. Although the motifs change, from one animal
or flower to another, each show extends into the next
to become part of a hypothetical single continuum,
in other words the rite of a show, the story of the
community that performs it with the joy of disguise
and the solitude of cohabitation. However, behind
the often heartbreaking splendour of the visual tableaux,
the seductive feline and ineluctable manner in which
the troupe advances in single file, and the pattern
of the movements, regular but cleverly out of tune,
through this lifelong self-portrayal the great artist
offers all her spectators an ironic and desperate
mirror in which to reflect their existential condition.

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What is modern British theatre famous
for? Its actors? Certainly. Its directors? Possibly.
But it is living dramatists who are the most potent
symbol of the British theatre's vitality; and the
Royal Court Theatre, winner of the Europe Prize New
Theatrical Realities, has done more than any other
institution to promote new writing. Since 1956 it
has premiered the work of many of the best-known British
dramatists: Osborne, Wesker, Pinter, Bond, Barker,
Hare and Churchill. But this Award is given not so
much for the Court's distinguished history as for
its championship, in recent years, of new generation
of challenging, often profondly disturbing, writers
whose work has travelled widely throughout Europe:
writers like Sarah Kane (Blasted and Cleansed), Mark
Ravenhill (Shopping and Fucking) and Jez Butterworth
(Mojo) who graphically express their horror at the
moral emptiness and crude materialism of the world
they have inherited. Their plays are filled with images
of violence, but behind the violence lies an anger
and confusion at the difficulty of existing in a post-Marxist,
post-Christian, post-Utopian society. Forced to leave
its permanent home in London's Sloane Square in 1996,
so that the building could be restored, the Royal
Court has since operated in two West End venues. But
it has lost none of its danger and vitality. Under
the direction first of Stephen Daldry and now of Ian
Rickson, it has staged coproductions with companies
such as Out of Joint and Théâtre de Complicité
(including a sensational revival of Ionesco's The
Chairs). It has presented outstanding plays by young
Irish writers such Conor McPherson and Martin McDonagh.
It has also launched an international programme involving
exchanges with other theatres throughout the world.
But, above all, it has given voice to a new generation
of young writers whose moral anger, urban despair
and political disillusion have sent shockwaves throughout
the whole of Europe.

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